Wings of the Morning

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Authors: Julian Beale

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WINGS
OF THE
MORNING

 

Julian Beale

for the love of Africa

Royalties from the sale of this book are donated to registered charities which support Africans in need.

Copyright © Julian Beale 2012

Julian Beale has asserted his right
under the Copyright, Designs and
Patents Act 1988 to be identified
as the author of this work.

Cover image: Shutterstock

Umbria Press
London SW15 5DP
www.umbriapress.co.uk

Printed and bound by
Ashford Colour Press, Gosport

Paperback ISBN 978-0-9573641-0-3
E book ISBN 978-0-9573641-6-5

 

MAJOR CHARACTERS

THE OXFORD FIVE

 

 

OTHER KEY PEOPLE

If I take the wings of the morning,

and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea;

Even there shall thy hand lead me,

and thy right hand shall hold me.

 

PSALM
139

CONTENTS

OLIVER AVELING — 2021

MICHEL LABARRE — 1963

DAVID HEAVEN — 1943 to 1965

JOSH TROLLOPE — 1965

SOLOMON KIRCHOFF — 1965

DAVID HEAVEN —1965

THE OXFORD FIVE — 1970

THIERRY CESTAC — 1970

KINGSTON OFFENBACH — 1970

ALEXA LABARRE — 1970

CONRAD AVELING — 1970

DAVID HEAVEN — 1970

ALEXA BUSHELL — 1971

DAVID HEAVEN — 1973

THIERRY CESTAC — 1974

CONRAD AVELING — 1975

ALEXA BUSHELL — 1977

THE OXFORD FIVE — 1977

THIERRY CESTAC — 1980

KINGSTON OFFENBACH — 1984

DAVID HEAVEN & MARTIN KIRCHOFF — 1985

THIERRY CESTAC — 1986

ALEXA BUSHELL — 1987

AISCHA GOMES — 1989

HUGH DUNDAS —1990

THIERRY CESTAC — 1991

AISCHA GOMES — 1994

DAVID HEAVEN — 1995

THE OXFORD FIVE — 1996

CONRAD AVELING — 1996

DAVID HEAVEN — 1997

FERGUS CARRADINE — 1997

THE OXFORD FIVE — 1997

CONRAD AVELING — 1998

DAVID HEAVEN — 1998

JOSH TROLLOPE — February 1999

THIERRY CESTAC — July 1999

DAVID HEAVEN & AISCHA GOMES — September 1999

DAVID HEAVEN — December 1999

FERGUS CARRADINE — New Year’s Day 2000

MARTIN KIRCHOFF — March 2000

KINGSTON OFFENBACH — May 2000

PENTE BROKE SMITH — December 2000

AISCHA HEAVEN — May 2003

ALEXA DUNDAS — August 2004

DAVID HEAVEN — May 2013

OLIVER AVELING — 2021

OLIVER AVELING — 2021

Most people call me ‘Olty’. I turn thirty today, the first of January 2021. I enjoy my birthday on New Year’s Day. It wasn’t so great when I was a
child, but since reaching my teenage years, I’ve had a lot of fun with extra celebration after the partying on New Year’s Eve. This year’s a bit special of course: thirty is a
major number and a dozen of us have planned a big bash for tonight. But I want to make a start on this project first. It’s going to be a challenge.

I’m a diplomat by profession. I’m white, single, straight, solvent. I work with a great bunch of people and I’m lucky with my friends. I travel a lot, but I love coming home to
this apartment with its brilliant view over the ocean. I have company from time to time, but there’s no one really serious in my life.

I was born in England, but I’ve lived here since I finished school twelve years ago. ‘Here’ is Century City, Capital of Millennium, a country occupying a landmass on the West
Coast of Africa as old as time itself, although our nation was born only twenty-one years ago today.

Millennium’s struggle into existence is the kernel of my story, but there’s a more personal element to it as well. Our country’s founding president was David Heaven who’s
been long gone from life and much longer from that post. I was twenty-two when he died and I knew him a bit because he had been close to our family since I was a boy and he features in my earliest
memories. He was gruff but kind, and to give him his due, he was a pretty good communicator with all age groups. Plus of course, David Heaven was for a while the
man
of Millennium and was
therefore a significant figure. Until his death, I thought of him as an important family friend and after he had gone, I simply thought about him less and less. I certainly had no idea that he was
my biological grandfather, the father of my mother. So this news hit me like a thunderbolt.

A little over a year ago, I was spending a lot of working time in New York and I had a visit from a Frenchman called Guy Labarre. He’s not a relative but our families have been intertwined
over many years. Guy is a human rights lawyer and we did have a bit of business to do together, but that was not the reason to bring him calling. He bought me lunch and took the opportunity to hand
over a letter written to me by David Heaven. It doesn’t say much, just a simple message addressed to me in his handwriting which I recognised on the envelope.

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